It is also reputed that it was on the platform[4] of Sidcup railway station that Mick Jagger and Keith Richards first agreed to form a band, which later became the Rolling Stones. Other connections of Sidcup to the world of entertainment and show business include the Rose Bruford College of drama and Bird College, both of which have many well known and famous alumni; regular large-scale concerts are given by Sidcup Symphony Orchestra[5], conducted by James Ross, which also serves the wider London Borough of Bexley.

The caves were featured on several television programmes including an episode of the BBC programme 'Doctor Who' from 1973 titled "The Mutants", and 'Seven Natural Wonders' as one of the wonders of the London area, in an episode presented by Bill Oddie. Also featured in the movies Tribe and Inseminoid.

The south and west sides of the Square were completed in the 1830s, and the entire square by 1847. The Tredegar Square Conservation Area was established in 1971, after the square had become neglected prior to World War II; the area surrounding it was badly damaged by bombing during the war.

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